Three candidates remain in this electoral competition: Luis Felipe Bravo Mena from the National Action Party (PAN), Eruviel Ávila Villegas from the PRI, leading the “United for you” coalition, and Alejandro Encinas Rodríguez from the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), representing the so-called “United we can do more” coalition.

Juan José Solis [es], for blog Hispanic LA, notes the relevance of this local electoral process and signals an aspect that, in his opinion, should not go unnoticed:

In this sense, the Edomex election, more than being a laboratory of electoral results, is a scenario of discursive practices and an opinion poll of perception for the candidates aiming to occupy the presidency of the Republic.

Going by that which is seen (and measured), the elections in Edomex will not be close, as they have never been in the past. But that which the presidential candidates do surrounding this election is that which we truly cannot not lose sight of, since the best contenders will emerge from here, ready to confront a competition that is envisioned with a high content of “dirty warfare”… and as a result, various political chapters are to be written.

Regarding the same topic, the aforementioned author expresses his considerations with respect to the proposals of the contenders for governing the entity in question:

In the offer and the discourse that at the moment have been spilled throughout the distinct campaign strategies, there is not a single candidate that offers a true plan or government qualities that provide a solution to the entity's complex problems. Currently, what it has is a mere rhetoric and promises that far from easily can be materialized. A vague offering, for example, is to sign the government's promises before a notary public, a strategy that looks to seduce the Mexican citizen so that he or she believes that the acquired compromise will have an obligation of legal character to have the notarial support by this means; but since in reality, no one obliges the candidate to complete the signed agreements, the only thing that the notary does is provide faith in the signature, but it does not confine it to any executive mark of legal character.

A blog of radical nature like Círculo de estudios Coapa [es] notes its perception of the local electoral process set for July 3, 2011 and its relevance, with sights on the presidential succession next year:

Alejandro Encinas Rodríguez-PRD. Image from Mimikamen under public domain

The bourgeoisie (middle class) will intend, by all means, to prevent the left from securing the presidency in 2012; for bankers, corporate officials, landowners, drug traffickers, imperialism, there is no worse nightmare possible than to lose the presidential elections, a hit like that could put their interests and dominating system in question. The Edomex government is clinging on to that by their nails and teeth, fighting for the triumph of Eruviel Ávila in the next state elections on July 3, representing the first step to confront the left, looking to the presidential elections in 2012.

Other members of the national blogosphere express their opinion in a categorical manner, with respect to each of the candidates; such is the case of Arcadio González [es], who highlighted the following for his blog, Nuestro México bizarro(“Our Bizarre Mexico”) [es]:

Looking at the first two candidates, the one from PAN, Luis Felipe Bravo Mena, and the one from PRD, Alejandro de Jesús Encinas Rodríguez, I don't know if I should LAUGH or CRY for their tenacity to become contenders for the Government of the State of Mexico 18 years after, when they only had 17.89% and 8.73%, respectively, of the total votes in 1993.

There is not the slightest doubt that PRI candidate Eruviel Ávila Villegas, a prepared and successful person, that throughout his political life, has won his candidacies for election and the majority vote, unlike the previous candidates. He is the only one of the three that was born in the State of Mexico and the only of the three that truly knows the problems of his State and Municipalities, and his work has revolved around the very State of Mexico, always leaning towards PRI and has been convinced of his ideology, or at least, has not changed parties, which for many can be his defect, but if we analyze it a little bit, in reality it is his virtue.

Analysts like Juan José Rodríguez Prats [es] (whose contribution on the topic can be found in the blog, La voz de la región) criticize the PRI candidate's campaign:

In the State of Mexico, as in other entities, they are killing the citizen consciousness. Eruviel Ávila's publicity in his ambition for attaining the government post becomes crushing, overbearing. In the direction one points his or her view, something localizes itself in relation to the PRI candidate. If they boast about their enormous advantage in the polls, what case does this enormous waste of resources have?

Additionally, Rodríguez Prats makes mention of that which according to his understanding would be a possible consequence of Eruviel Ávila favorable standing in the approaching elections:

In the State of Mexico, as in Coahuila and Nayarit, there is a latent, enormous threat of regression to old authoritarianism and rancid corruption, a product of the PRI-state government imbrication. Contrary to its origins in those which take their decisions from the center, now the governors are masters and lords in their entities.

It's obvious that I analyze the performance of the three candidates in the State of Mexico from my trench party, but the truth is that I have not found any convincing PRI argument for citizen support from the one that presumes. The only thing I perceive is the weight of money as well as the unconditional and overwhelming support for the Mexican governmental apparatus, as demonstrated in that video that, as so much other evidence, was rejected by electoral organs.

To conclude, it is important to mention that one month before the elections, the Center For Strategic & International Studies reported that candidate Eruviel Ávila had 45% of the electorate's approval according to a survey done at the end of May. On the other hand, 12 days before the election, Strategic Communication Cabinet[es] reports that according to its daily survey, the PRI candidate has 52% of the preferred votes, while candidates from PRD and PAN have 20.2% and 13.2% respectively.

In a democratic system like that of Mexico, the voters are the ones that will have the last word and will have to assert it in the polls accordingly.